Yellow Trumpet-Tree

Tabebuia aurea

"Tabebuia aurea" is a species of "Tabebuia" native to South America in Suriname, Brazil, eastern Bolivia, Peru, Paraguay, and northern Argentina. The common English name Caribbean trumpet tree is misleading, as it is not native to the Caribbean. It is also known as the silver trumpet tree, and tree of gold.
Yellow Trumpet Tree with Bumblebee  Mato Grosso,Pantanal,Southwild Pantanal Lodge,Tabebuia aurea,Transpantaneira highway,Yellow Trumpet-Tree

Appearance

It is a small dry season-deciduous tree growing to 8 m tall. The leaves are palmately compound, with five or seven leaflets, each leaflet 6–18 cm long, green with silvery scales both above and below.

The flowers are bright yellow, up to 6.5 cm diameter, produced several together in a loose panicle. The fruit is a slender 10 cm long capsule.

;Cultivation
It is a popular ornamental tree in subtropical and tropical regions, grown for its spectacular flower display on leafless shoots at the end of the dry season.
Yellow Trumpet tree with ant There appear to be quite a number of ants on these trees (protectors?) Mato Grosso,Pantanal,Southwild Pantanal Lodge,Tabebuia aurea,Transpantaneira highway,Yellow Trumpet-Tree

Habitat

This species presence in riparian areas of the Caatinga of northeastern Brazil is a crucial resource for Spix's macaw, which is extinct in the wild with fewer than 100 birds remaining in captivity. Any future reintroduction would have to provide sufficient "T. aurea" for nesting and other purposes - while the tree is not considered threatened on a global scale, locally it has declined due to unsustainable use for timber and some other factors.

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

Status: Unknown
EX EW CR EN VU NT LC
Taxonomy
KingdomPlantae
DivisionAngiosperms
ClassEudicots
OrderLamiales
FamilyBignoniaceae
GenusTabebuia
SpeciesT. aurea
Photographed in
Brazil
Vietnam